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Alamo Heights Walk Score: How Walkable Is Alamo Heights, TX?

  • Park Properties Group
  • June 22, 2026

What Is the Walk Score of Alamo Heights, TX?

Alamo Heights Walk Scores range from 74 to 88 depending on proximity to Broadway, placing most addresses in the "Very Walkable" category — meaning most errands can be accomplished on foot. This is significantly higher than San Antonio's city-wide average of 37. Homes along and near the Broadway corridor score 84–88, while residential blocks further from the commercial spine score 74–81. The city has approximately 72 restaurants, bars, and coffee shops, with residents able to walk to an average of 2 dining options within 5 minutes.

When people search for "Alamo Heights walk score," they're usually asking a bigger question: can I actually live here without a car for every errand? In a city where most neighborhoods score below 40 on walkability, it's a fair thing to wonder.

The short answer: yes — Alamo Heights is one of the most walkable places in San Antonio, and the data backs it up.

Alamo Heights Walk Score: The Numbers

Walk Score measures walkability on a 0–100 scale based on proximity to destinations like grocery stores, restaurants, parks, schools, and retail. San Antonio as a whole scores a 37 out of 100 — officially "Car-Dependent." Most errands require a car.

Alamo Heights is a different story. Because it's an incorporated city within the San Antonio metro — with its own governance, its own school district, and critically its own commercial spine along Broadway — it functions more like a small walkable village than a typical suburb.

Walk Scores for addresses within Alamo Heights typically fall in these ranges:

  • Near Broadway (4900–5400 block): Walk Score 84–88 — "Very Walkable"
  • Interior residential streets (Evans, Fenimore, Circle, Harrigan): Walk Score 74–81 — "Very Walkable"
  • Edges of the city further from Broadway: Walk Score 46–65 — "Somewhat Walkable"

The city has approximately 72 restaurants, bars, and coffee shops, and Walk Score data shows residents can walk to an average of 2 dining options within 5 minutes — a meaningful number for a neighborhood in car-centric San Antonio.

What Makes Alamo Heights Walkable

The backbone of Alamo Heights' walkability is Broadway. Running north from downtown San Antonio through the heart of the neighborhood, Broadway is a true commercial corridor — not a strip mall, not a highway feeder road, but a genuine mixed-use street with restaurants, coffee shops, boutiques, galleries, and services.

Within walking distance of most Alamo Heights addresses, you'll find:

  • Dining and coffee: A dense cluster of local restaurants along Broadway and New Braunfels Avenue — from neighborhood cafés to well-known San Antonio spots — plus the area's thriving brunch and weekend scene
  • Schools: Alamo Heights ISD campuses, including Alamo Heights High School and the district's elementary schools, are accessible on foot for many residents — a rare feature in San Antonio
  • Parks: Olmos Basin Park runs along the city's western edge, offering trails, open space, and the Olmos Dam area. Brackenridge Park is nearby to the south.
  • Cultural destinations: The McNay Art Museum, Witte Museum, and San Antonio Zoo are all within easy reach — walkable or a very short drive
  • Retail and services: The Quarry Village and Lincoln Heights shopping areas anchor the northern edge of the neighborhood with grocery, fitness, and daily services

Why Walkability Matters for Home Values Here

Walkability doesn't just affect lifestyle — it affects price. Studies consistently show that homes in walkable neighborhoods command a premium over comparable car-dependent properties. In Alamo Heights, that premium is baked in: the neighborhood's Walk Score is part of what separates it from other luxury pockets in San Antonio that might have larger lots or newer construction but require a car for every errand.

Buyers who are relocating from walkable cities — New York, Chicago, Washington D.C., Austin — consistently identify Alamo Heights as one of the few places in San Antonio that comes close to the pedestrian lifestyle they're used to. That demand sustains values even when the broader San Antonio market softens.

If you're evaluating a specific address in Alamo Heights, the block matters. Homes within two or three blocks of Broadway score highest. Homes on the quiet interior streets — Evans, Fenimore, Circle — score slightly lower but still land in the "Very Walkable" range. The edges of the city, particularly toward Austin Highway, start to feel more car-dependent.

Curious what your specific home is worth — or which Alamo Heights streets combine the highest walkability with the best value?

Start with a complimentary home valuation, or schedule a call with Caroline and Susanne — we've lived and worked in this neighborhood for years and can walk you through exactly what the data means for your specific situation. For more on what makes Alamo Heights one of Texas's most sought-after neighborhoods, see our post on why Alamo Heights was named one of the best places to live in Texas.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Walk Score of Alamo Heights, TX?

Walk Scores in Alamo Heights range from 74 to 88 depending on proximity to Broadway, placing most addresses in the "Very Walkable" category. Homes closest to the Broadway commercial corridor score 84–88. This compares to San Antonio's overall Walk Score of 37, making Alamo Heights one of the most walkable areas in the metro.

What can you walk to in Alamo Heights?

Alamo Heights has about 72 restaurants, bars, and coffee shops. Residents can walk to dining along Broadway and New Braunfels Avenue, local cafés, boutique shops, Alamo Heights ISD schools, Olmos Basin Park, and cultural destinations including the McNay Art Museum, Witte Museum, and San Antonio Zoo.

How does Alamo Heights walkability compare to the rest of San Antonio?

San Antonio has a Walk Score of 37, categorized as "Car-Dependent." Alamo Heights scores 74–88 — one of the most walkable municipalities in the metro. The difference is the Broadway commercial corridor: a genuine walkable main street with dining, retail, and daily services that most San Antonio neighborhoods don't have.

About the Authors

Caroline Decherd and Susanne Marco are the founders of Park Properties Group, a luxury real estate team specializing in Alamo Heights, Terrell Hills, Olmos Park, Monte Vista, and San Antonio's historic central neighborhoods. They guide sellers and buyers through one of Texas's most distinctive luxury markets.

Park Properties Group  |  6061 Broadway, San Antonio, TX 78209
Caroline: (210) 313-2904  |  Susanne: (210) 632-8400

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